๐ Inhibitors of cathepsin L prevent severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus entry
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is caused by an emergent coronavirus (SARS-CoV), for which there is currently no effective treatment. SARS-CoV mediates receptor binding and entry by its spike (S) glycoprotein, and infection is sensitive to lysosomotropic agents that perturb endosomal pH. We demonstrate here that the lysosomotropic-agent-mediated block to SARS-CoV infection is overcome by protease treatment of target-cell-associated virus. In addition, SARS-CoV infection was blocked by specific inhibitors of the pH-sensitive endosomal protease cathepsin L. A cell-free membrane-fusion system demonstrates that engagement of receptor followed by proteolysis is required for SARS-CoV membrane fusion and indicates that cathepsin L is sufficient to activate membrane fusion by SARS-CoV S. These results suggest that SARS-CoV infection results from a unique, three-step process: receptor binding and induced conformational changes in S glycoprotein followed by cathepsin L proteolysis within endosomes. The requirement for cathepsin L proteolysis identifies a previously uncharacterized class of inhibitor for SARS-CoV infection. ยฉ 2005 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.
keywords
๐ receptor binding (86)
๐ respiratory syndrome (2004)
๐ results suggest (206)
๐ acute respiratory (1734)
๐ membrane fusion (105)
author
๐ค Simmons, Graham
๐ค Gosalia, Dhaval N.
๐ค Rennekamp, Andrew J.
๐ค Reeves, Jacqueline D.
๐ค Diamond, Scott L.
๐ค Bates, Paul
year
โฐ 2005
issn
๐ 00278424
volume
102
number
33
page
11876-11881
citedbycount
310
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